The "Intoxication State of Consciousness": A Model for Alcohol and Drug Abuse
MARC GALANTER M.D.1
1 Career Teacher in Alcoholism and Drug Abuse and Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry. Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx. N.Y. 10461
The author describes a model of intoxicant use based on altered states of consciousness and reviews his own and others' research on marijuana to illustrate the utility of this model, which is derived from both introspective reports and observed data. The relationship of social behavior and cognitive functioning to the "intoxication state of consciousness" is discussed. This state of consciousness may hate an adaptive value in engendering find stabilizing social cohesion. Possible treatment implications include cognitive labeling of cues that precipitate episodes of abuse, training for moderated drug use while patients are intoxicated, and providing abusers with altered consciousness through other means, such meditation.